Jump to June 2012 archive page: 1 2 3
  • Cartoons about Eric Holder and Fast and Furious

    Overshadowed by the Supreme Court's ruling on Obamacare was a vote by Congress holding Attorney General Eric Holder in contempt for his decision to withhold information on a failed gun walking scheme that led to the death of a border patrol agent. 

    So is this a political witch-hunt or legitimate oversight? Five cartoonists (including me) weigh in on the decision...

    Daryl Cagle / msnbc.com (click to view more cartoons by Cagle)

    John Cole / Scranton Times-Tribune (click to view more cartoons by Cole)

    Bob Englehart / Hartford Courant (click to view more cartoons by Englehart)

    Jimmy Margulies / The Record (click to view more cartoons by Margulies)

    Randall Enos / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Enos)



     

  • 'Ted' Creator Seth MacFarlane Accused of Ripping Off A Cartoonist... Again

    Clovis, a character from Lucas Turnbloom's comic strip "Imagine THIS."

    By Rob Tornoe, Editor & Publisher

    Amid the rise and success of hit TV shows such as "Family Guy" and "American Dad," animator-turned Hollywood powerhouse Seth MacFarlane has been dogged with accusations of joke-stealing and lack of originality in his work. 

    Now, cartoonists are pointing out the similarities between his new motion picture "Ted" and popular comic strip "Imagine This." The strip, created in 2008 by cartoonist Lucas Turnbloom and syndicated by Universal Uclick, centers around a slacker and his foul-mouthed teddy bear sidekick who drinks beer and has anger issues. 


     

    Tall Tale Radio podcaster Tom Racine compared panels from "Imagine THIS" with scenes from "Ted" (click to view more).

    "Certainly, the idea of someone talking to a stuffed animal isn't new," said Tom Racine, host of Tall Tale Radio, a popular podcast about comics, animation, and movies. "But 'Ted' feels like it was just taken directly from 'Imagine This' with little or no attempt to change it." 

    Racine created a shot-by-shot graphic pairing panels from "Imagine This" and screenshots from "Ted." In one, both Ted and Turnbloom's bear character Clovis are leaning back while drinking a beer. In another, both sets of characters sit lazily on the couch eating cereal. 

    Turnbloom, who has devoted the last five years developing "Imagine This," said he was devastated when he found out about MacFarlane's movie. 

    "Many cartoonists, myself included, hope that their strips might someday be developed into a movie or a TV show," he said. "I guess 'Ted' proves I was right to believe that my strip had cinematic potential." 

    There is no evidence that MacFarlane was influenced by "Imagine This," and the cartoon world (and Hollywood, for that matter) is replete with stories about stolen jokes, reworked gags, and outright theft of ideas, all of which are extremely difficult to prove. Turnbloom himself isn't pressing the issue or accusing MacFarlane of stealing his work. 

    But John Glynn, vice president of rights and acquisitions at Universal Uclick and gocomics.com, where "Imagine This" runs, said the similarities between the two are too striking to simply shrug off. 

    MacFarlane has been accused of stealing the idea for "Family Guy's" Stewie from Chris Ware's "Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth." (click to enlarge)

    "I see lots of similar jokes, concepts, and premises that come through our submissions and editing processes, so I know people can arrive at the same place totally separate of each other," Glynn said. "In those cases, I try to give everyone the benefit of the doubt. I'd give that benefit to Mr. MacFarlane here, but the similarities are hard to deny." 

    This isn't the first time MacFarlane has been called out for similarities between his creations and comic characters. 

    When "Family Guy" first aired, comic book fans were angered over the striking similarities between Stewie and Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth, a character from Chris Ware's popular comic "Acme Novelty Library." Corrigan, created by Ware in 1991, is an infant with a football-shaped head who fears his mother and invents things to try to escape. 

    Ware told Entertainment Weekly that the similarities between the two characters were "a little too coincidental to be simply, well, coincidental," but added, "If I let it get the better of me, I wouldn't get any work done. I'd just sit around and stew about it." 

    "I'm not sure how artists can protect themselves against huge media conglomerates," Racine said. "I think it's important for creators to point this sort of thing out, but usually, not much can be done about it." 

    Neither Seth MacFarlane nor anyone at his production company, Fuzzy Door Productions, could be reached for comment. 

    -----

    © Copyright 2012 Rob Tornoe, distributed exclusively by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate. 

    Rob Tornoe is a cartoonist and columnist for Editor & Publisher. Rob can be reached at RobTornoe@gmail.com..

     

  • Cartoon slideshow: Health care mandate upheld

    David Fitzsimmons / Arizona Daily Star (click to launch slideshow)

    Today, the Supreme Court ruled that the so-called "individual mandate" in President Obama's Affordable Care Act is constitutional. Conservative Chief Justice John Roberts (a George W. Bush nominee) sided with the court's liberals, a move that has angered some conservatives enough to call for his resignation. 

    Check out what our cartoonists think of the ruling in our new Health care mandate upheld cartoon slideshow.  


     

  • A Cartoon That I’m Happy Not to Draw

    I’m a pessimist, and I drew this sketch, anticipating that the conservative justices on the Supreme Court would strike down Obamacare this morning -of-course, I’m a lazy pessimist, so I didn’t actually draw the finished cartoon in advance, just a sketch so I could knock it out faster this morning. Some other cartoonists actually drew two cartoons in advance, anticipating different outcomes.

    The Court surprised me and upheld Obamacare, so I’m delighted not to be finishing the drawing!



  • My health care cartoons

    With all the emphasis today on the Affordable Health Care Act and the Supreme Court, I thought I’d share a handful of my cartoons and recap how we reached this point.

    Obama’s health care reform started off with a much-maligned “public option” that was heavily opposed by Republicans and businesses…

    Obama tried his best to get Republicans to work with him, but their response was predictable…

    Eventually, through legislative wrangling, Obama was able to pass his compromised health care law…

    Unfortunately, Democrats have lost the PR battle, and now face losing important parts of their signature achievement…


     

  • Scalia’s political dissent draws criticism from cartoonists

    Antonin Scalia may have gone too far this time. The conservative Supreme Court justice is being roundly criticized for a highly-political 22-page dissenting opinion on the court’s ruling on the Arizona immigration law.

    Here are some cartoons about the sharp-tongued Scalia, including one I drew back in 2004 after he was criticized for going on a duck-hunting trip with Vice President Dick Cheney.

    Pat Bagley / Salt Lake Tribune (click to view more cartoons by Bagley)

    Rob Tornoe / Media Matters (click to view more cartoons by Tornoe)

    Daryl Cagle / msnbc.com (click to view more cartoons by Cagle)

    Jen Sorenson / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Sorensen)

    Taylor Jones / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Jones)



     

  • Will health care reform survive?

    Daryl Cagle msnbc.com (click to launch slideshow)

    Tomorrow will be a pivotal day for the Obama administration. The Supreme Court will determine whether his signature piece of legislation - health care reform - is constitutional or not. 

    Will it survive, or will the court strike it down? Check out what our cartoonists think in our new Will health care reform survive? slideshow.


     

  • Cartoonists Prepare for 'Obamacare' Ruling

    On Thursday, the Supreme Court will rule one way or another on the constitutionality of President Obama’s health care reform legislation.

    Rarely are political cartoonists given a heads-up like this prior to a big news event. Normally, we draw two types of cartoons – breaking news, like the death of Osama bin Laden or the BP oil spill, or cartoons on evergreen topics, like money in politics, global warming and the right versus left divide.

    On the rare opportunities political cartoonists have a leg-up on a news event (like on an election night), it’s common to draw two cartoons prior to the outcome, in order to make the print deadline for the next day’s newspaper.  In the digital world, this becomes even more important, as a thought-provoking cartoon drawn ahead of time can hit the zeitgeist quicker and spread like wildfire. It reminds me of big sporting events, where both teams have championship  t-shirts printed, but only one gets to wear them after the game. The losers’ gear is packed up and sent overseas to be given away as charity.

    David Fitzsimmons, the staff cartoonist at the Arizona Daily Star (whose cartoons I syndicate through Cagle Cartoons), has filed his two cartoons about the health care ruling. Here’s his cartoon if the court rules that the plan is unconstitutional:

    And here’s Fitzsimmons cartoon if the court rules in favor of the law:



     

  • Cartoon slideshow: Economic pain in Spain

    Daryl Cagle / msnbc.com (click to launch slideshow)

    With the media understandably focused on the Supreme Court, some news stories tend to fall through the cracks. Hit hard by the housing bubble, nearly 25 percent of people in Spain are currently unemployed. In addition, Moody's just cut the credit ratings of 28 Spanish banks, increasing borrowing costs and putting more pressure on Spain's struggling budget. 


    Check out what the best cartoonists across the globe think in our new Economic pain in Spain cartoon slideshow


  • Americans Love Garbage

    Did you know that Americans generate more trash than anyone else on the planet?

    According to Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Edward Humes, the author of  ”Garbology: Our Dirty Love Affair with Trash,” nearly 70 percent of the trash we create (102 tons over our lifetime) goes immediately into landfills. Most of it is made up of containers and packaging, all of which should be recycled. In fact, he estimates we throw away almost $50 billion in squandered riches each year.

    Check out Keith Knight’s cartoon on the subject, and view all of his terrific cartoons here.



     

  • Supreme Court Smacks Down Arizona

    Bob Englehart / Hartford Courant (click to launch slideshow)

    The Supreme Court knocked down several key provision from Arizona's controversial immigration law, but kept in place a provision requiring law enforcement to verify a person's immigration status during lawful detainments

    What do our cartoonists think of the ruling? Check out our new Arizona Immigration Laws Struck Down cartoon slideshow!


     

  • 5 cartoons about the future of health care reform

    The Supreme Court didn't issue a ruling today on Obama's health care reform law, so we'll all have to wait until Thursday to find out if 'Obamacare' and its individual mandate are constitutional.

    How do you think the court will rule? Comment below, or drop a note on our Facebook page

    Daryl Cagle / msnbc.com (click to view more cartoons by Cagle)

    Chris Weyant / The Hill (click to view more cartoons by Weyant)

    David Fitzsimmons / Arizona Daily Star (click to view more cartoons by Fitzsimmons)

    Adam Zyglis / Buffalo News (click to view more cartoons by Zyglis)

    Keith Knight / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Knight)



     

  • Cartoonists React to Sandusky Guilty Verdict

    Former assistant Penn State football coach Jerry Sandusky has been found guilty on 45 of 48 counts of sexual abuse of boys over the course of a 15-year period. He will mace a maximum sentence of 445 years in prison, where he will now spend the rest of his life.

    Here are five political cartoons about the verdict and the pain and misery Sandusky has caused so many…

    Randall Enos / Cagle Cartoons (click to view more cartoons by Enos)

    Randy Bish / Pittsburgh Tribune- Review (click to view more cartoons by Bish)

    David Fitzsimmons / Arizona Daily Star (click to view more cartoons by Fitzsimmons)

    John Cole / Scranton Times-Tribune (click to view more cartoons by Cole)

    Joe Heller / Green Bay Press-Gazette (click to view more cartoons by Heller)



     

  • Newspaper shakeup down under

    Paul Zanetti / Australia, PoliticalCartoons.com

    Newspapers in the U.S. aren’t the only ones suffering from a steep decline in revenue as advertisers move online. Australian media company Fairfax, owners of Sydney Morning Herald and The Age, sent shockwaves through the country by announcing it would layoff 1,900 members of its staff and put its online versions behind a paywall.

    I asked Aussie cartoonist Paul Zanetti (whom I syndicate through Cagle Cartoons) to sum up the latest for our American readers. Here’s what he wrote:

    With Fairfax, there are a planned 1900 job losses. 1500 of these are from the Sydney and Melbourne printing plants – which are being sold off (who will buy if the majors are getting out of print?).

    The rest of the job losses will be journalist redundancies (400) over all their titles. The plan is to go hard into digital and with a content pay wall.

    This has been on the cards for years. I’m surprised it’s taken so long. It’s not that there’s no demand for news and information, which is as strong as ever. It’s the delivery method that’s changing. Information and news has to be instantaneous in this competitive and fast-moving world. Newspapers can’t compete with the internet, radio and TV (particularly cable TV).

    Fairfax’s Greg Hywood seemed to be reacting to the inevitable, looking frightened at his news conference this week, with an air of gloom and doom.

    In contrast, News Ltd’s Kim Williams looked relaxed and confident, when he announced yesterday a bid for another major media company and various future plans, saying, NEWS is not a newspaper company but a media company. He also added that NEWS sells 11 million newspapers a week (in a country of 22 million and Fairfax sells 3 million newspapers). Having said that, it’s the online ads, not circulation decline, affecting the bottom line.

    The internet is changing, not just the newspaper industry, but retail, music, travel, local video / dvd stores, telecommunications etc.

    We should embrace and move with change. It’s exciting. The internet provides opportunities for all. It’s a great equaliser putting more control and choices into the hands of the every man (and woman – and kid for that matter).

    Those crying out for the status quo to remain, are the latter day luddites. The news media will continue to grow. Only the delivery will change.

    I see the glass half full. Bring on the exciting future of media.

  • 5 cartoons about today’s heat wave

    A heat wave blankets the country for the second straight day, as temperatures in the Northeast are expected to reach the upper 90s!

    Our columnist Tom Purcell may blame air conditioners for the growth of big government in Washington (allowing politicians to keep working throughout the summer), but I would have melted by now if it wasn’t for the cold air being pumped into my studio.

    Here are some funny cartoon about today’s scorcher…

    Nate Beeler / Columbus Dispatch (click to view more cartoons by Beeler)

    Pat Bagley / Salt Lake Tribune (click to view more cartoons by Bagley)

    Cam Cardow / Ottawa Citizen (click to view more cartoons by Cardow)

    Joe Heller / Green Bay Press-Gazette (click to view more cartoons by Heller)

    R.J. Matson / Roll Call (click to view more cartoons by Matson)

  • Warner Bros. Rejects Superman License Plate Wording

    Warner Bros. and DC Comics object to the phrase "Ohio: Birthplace of Superman" on a new license plate commemorating the 75th anniversary of the superhero's creation.

    According to his famous comic book origin, Superman was born on the planet Krypton. But in reality, the Man of Steel was created in a Glenville, Ohio bedroom by teenagers Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster.

    To commemorate Superman's 75th anniversary, Ohio had planned to offer specialty license plates with the famous “S” logo of Superman, along with the phrase “Ohio – Birthplace of Superman.” But plans may be on hold now that DC Comics and Warner Communications object to the wording.

    According to the Cleveland Plain Dealer, negotiations between the state government and DC have been amicable, and the state had no issue changing the slogan on the plate. State Rep. Bill Patmon, a Democrat from Cleveland, says the bill to approve the change, once a new slogan is selected, will be voted on in fall and  he expectes no opposition. 


     

    There has been a long and contentious legal fight regarding creator rights and the ownership of Superman. In 1975, Warner Bros. agreed to pay Siegal and Shuster a $20,000 stipend each for life, and add a "created by"credit on all relative material. Through the courts, the estate of Superman co-creator Jerry Siegel recaptured half of the original Superman rights in 2008, with the estate of co-creator Joe Shuster set to do the same in 2013. Warner Bros. is currentlyappealing the ruling.

    Nate Beeler, the new staff cartoonist for the Columbus Dispatch (whom I syndicate through Cagle Cartoons), said he understands the branding and intellectual property issues, yet this case feels a little silly to him. He wrote:

    "Everybody knows Superman is a fictional character who comes from the fictional planet Krypton and grew up in the fictional town of Smallville. What people might not know is that he was created in Cleveland by the legendary Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster. The license plate is a nice way of bringing attention to the great cultural contribution of these Ohioans. If the wording is changed to something like "Birthplace of the creators of Superman," I just hope that DC Comics won't object by saying, "But Superman's parents, Jor-El and Lara, were also from Krypton!"

    Here's Nate's cartoon:

  • 5 cartoons about Romney's VP options

    Who will Mitt Romney select to be his running mate? Will it be Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels? What about Florida Senator Marco Rubio? Let's not forget former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice or boisterous New Jersey Governor Chris Christie. 

    Who do you think Romney should pick? Here's a sampling of what our cartoonists think...

    R.J. Matson / St. Louis Post-Dispatch (click to view more cartoons by Matson)

    Jeff Parker / Florida Today (click to view more cartoons by Parker)

    Nate Beeler / Columbus Dispatch (click to view more cartoons by Beeler)

    Larry Wright / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Wright)

    Jimmy Margulies / The Record (click to view more cartoons by Margulies)



     

  • Morning cartoon round-up

    Microsoft launches a new tablet, home values continue to plummet and college graduates just want jobs. Here is our morning round-up of cartoons to get you caught up on what's happening in the news...

    Cam Cardow / Ottawa Citizen (click to view more cartoons by Cardow)

    R.J. Matson / Roll Call (click to view more cartoons by Matson)

    Nate Beeler / Columbus Dispatch (click to view more cartoons by Beeler)

    David Fitzsimmons / Arizona Daily Star (click to view more cartoons by Fitzsimmons)

    Taylor Jones / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Jones)



     

  • Cartoon slideshow: Lance Armstrong doping allegations

    John Cole / Scranton Times-Tribune (click to launch slideshow)

    The U.S. Anti-Doping Agency has filed formal charges against Lance Armstrong, alleging the seven-time Tour de France winner used performance-enhancing drugs. If found guilty, Armstrong could be striped of all his victories and face a ban from competing in triathlons, which he turned to after he retired from cycling last year.

    What do our cartoonists think? Find out in our new Armstrong Doping Allegations cartoon slideshow.  


     

  • Five cartoons about Obama's immigration policy

    Last week, President Obama created a media firestorm when he issued an order that allows more than 800,000 young illegal immigrants to remain in the United States without fear of deportation.

    Here is a round-up of some of our best cartoons on the subject. What do you think? Comment below, or drop a note on our Facebook page. 

    Brian Fairrington / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Fairrington)

    Nate Beeler / Columbus Dispatch (click to view more cartoons by Beeler)

    Randy Bish / Pittsburgh Tribune-Review (click to view more cartoons by Bish)

    John Darkow / Columbia Daily Tribune (click to view more cartoons by Darkow)

    Jimmy Margulies / The Record (click to view more cartoons by Margulies)



     

  • Cartoon slideshow: Vacation time

    Martin Sutovec / Slovakia, PoliticalCartoons.com (click to launch slideshow)

    As the summer approaches, it's time for all you hard workers out there to take some time off and enjoy some much needed R&R. What, you're afraid of losing your job? No vacation time at your work? No money to go anywhere? 

    Nevermind. At least take a minute and enjoy our new Vacation Time cartoon slideshow. 


  • Afternoon cartoon round-up

    The GOP is palling around with imaginary friends, Karl Rove is worried that President Obama will buy the election and Romney's horse is off to the Olympics. Here is our afternoon round-up of cartoons to get you caught up on what's happening in the news...

    Mike Keefe / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Keefe)

    Rob Tornoe / Media Matters (click to view more cartoons by Tornoe)

    Dave Granlund / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Granlund)

    Tom Janssen / The Netherlands, PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Janssen)

    Chris Weyant / The Hill (click to view more cartoons by Weyant)



     

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